This is an introductory course into logic, the philosophy of science and the philosophy of the social sciences. It deals with questions concerning
* the aims of scientific inquiries,
* the differences between science and non-science,
* the potential validity of reasoning based on empirical data in distinction to deductive reasoning, and
* the presuppositions of all empirical inquiries.
The questions we will pursue are
- questions in the philosophy of science and the history of the philosophy of science,
- epistemological and
- metaphysical or ontological questions.
In order to answer these questions we will look into the beginning of philosophical reasoning from Antiquity to the Middle Ages to the “Scientific Revolution”. What are early views of “demonstration” of empirical investigations (Aristotle, Francis Bacon)? We will then focus on the scepticism concerning the foundations of such methods (David Hume), and Immanuel Kant's dissolution of these doubts in his „Copernican Turn“.
Toward the end of part A of this course we’ll have a look into the rise of the idea of “social sciences” in the 19th century (J. St. Mill, William Whewell, Auguste Comte) and the development of a "new mathematical" logic by Gottlob Frege. Then we will focus on the most influential methodological views in the 20th century based on this "mathematical" logic: Logical Empiricism and Critical Rationalism.
(Part A) The philosophy of science
The lecture part (= part A) of this course consists of an introduction and overview of the course structure, 4 lectures, and a session where we will look back at 2000 years of methodological thought.
0. Introduction: 14th March 2023
1. Scientific Reasoning in Antiquity: 21st March 2023
2. Scholasticism and the Scientific Revolution: 28th March 2023
3. Induction and the Presuppositions of all Empirical Observation: 11th April 2023
4. "Theories of Confirmation" and the development of a new, mathematical logic: 18th April 2023
5. Overview and Repetition: 25th April 2023
The fifth session is Q&A session. There is NO attendance requirement for part A. The lectures take place in HS TC.0.10. The most important parts of the 4 lectures are available as audio/slides.